Description
Science and beauty are rarely in conflict. Here they converge. The pure, colorless member of the beryl family, named for the Massachusetts town where it was first described. Without chromophores it is optically flawless — used historically as lens substitutes and for spectacles before glass-working advanced. Gem quality goshenite is paradoxically rarer than colored beryls.
This specimen originates from Goshen, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA, one of the world’s most significant localities for this type of material. Collectors and scientists have drawn from this region for generations, and for good reason: the combination of geological conditions here produces specimens of exceptional quality and clarity.
Every specimen is unique. Photographs approximate the visual experience, but the real thing — its weight, its luster under a raking light, the way it catches the corner of your eye — can only be experienced directly.





